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Saint-Petersburg > City Today > Museums > GATCHINA

GATCHINA

1 Krasnoarmeiskaya ulitsa 188300 Gatchina
Open: Ham - 5pm
Closed: Mondays and the first Tuesday of every month
Tel. 8-(271)-134-92
By public transport: Train from Baltiysky or Warsaw station to Gatchina

The first mention of Gatchina dates back to 1499, when it was known as the village of Khotchino. In the early 18th century it belonged to Peter I's beloved sister Natalia Alexeyevna, then passed to the Kurakin princes. In 1765 Catherine II presented it to her favourite, Count Grigory Orlov, who shortly afterwards commissioned Antonio Rinaldi to create a huge palace and park there. In 1783, after Orlov's death, Gatchina became the residence of Catherine II's son and heir to the throne, the future Emperor Paul I.

The Gatchina palace and park ensemble is one of the finest specimens of early Russian Neoclassicism. The palace, faced with local limestone and resembling a medieval English castle, was erected between 1766 and 1781. The interior decor was created by Russian masters according to designs by Rinaldi and Vincenzo Brenna. At the same time, Russia's first landscaped park was laid out. In the 1790s, the Gatchina palace was partly rebuilt by Brenna and in the 19th century it was again reconstructed by the architect Roman Kuzmin.

After the revolution, the living-rooms were opened to visitors and a museum of 18th and 19th century palace decoration and domestic life was established. During the occupation, the Nazis almost completely destroyed the interiors, felled the trees in the park, and reduced many of the buildings in the park to ruins. Before retreating, they set the palace on fire. Restoration and reconstruction work began in the 1970s and the museum in the Gatchina palace was reopened in 1985.

Today visitors can enjoy the decor of the Anteroom, the Marble Dining-Room, the Throne, White and Picture Halls. The superb parquetry designs, painted ceilings, stuccowork, bronzes, furniture and gobelins are of immense artistic value.

The palace's former art collections containing Russian and Western European paintings, porcelains, and Oriental objets d'art, are gradually being restored to their former owner. Visitors can also explore a mysterious subterranean passageway leading from the palace to the Echo grotto. On display is a remarkable collection of fire- and side-arms by I6th-20th century masters, begun by Count Grigory Orlov. On the parade ground, in front of the palace, is a bronze monument to Paul I, sculpted by Ivan Vitali (1850-51).

The Gatchina gardens and parks are laid out in a picturesque fashion and abound with diverse vegetation, planted with due regard to the different hues of leaves and needles. There are numerous bridges, terraces and spectacular stone staircases. The Eagle Pavilion on Dlinny (Long) Island, the Venus Pavilion on the "Island of Love", the Birch and Admiralty Gates, the Forest Hothouse (architect Brenna), the Aviary (architect Andrean Zakharov) never fail to catch the attention of visitors. The Prior's Palace, made of tamped earth, looks like a medieval castle (1797-99, architect Nikolai Lvov). The original Birch House, recalling a large pile of birch logs (1780s, artist A.F.Viollier), was restored between 1971 and 1975. Gatchina's famous parks are centered around its picturesque lakes and ponds - the White and Silver Lakes, the Carpiev Pond - and the islands and peninsulas in-between.

The palace houses an exhibition that tells the story of its owners and the history of its construction.

 

St. Petersburg Administration 191060, St. Petersburg, Smolny

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